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What Happens When Teaching Focuses Only on Exams

Stressed student preparing for exams

&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpcnt">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"wpa">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<span class&equals;"wpa-about">Advertisements<&sol;span>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<div class&equals;"u top&lowbar;amp">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<amp-ad width&equals;"300" height&equals;"265"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; type&equals;"pubmine"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-siteid&equals;"173035871"&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab; data-section&equals;"1">&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;amp-ad>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div>&NewLine;&Tab;&Tab;<&sol;div><p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The global education sector currently operates under a delusion that standardized test scores serve as a proxy for human intelligence and economic readiness&period; You see this manifest in classrooms from Shanghai to London and New York&comma; where the curriculum serves the test rather than the student&period; This fixation creates a dangerous feedback loop&period; Governments demand data to justify spending&period; Schools demand scores to secure funding&period; Teachers demand compliance to keep their jobs&period; In this transaction&comma; the actual acquisition of knowledge becomes a secondary concern&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We are witnessing the industrialization of the mind&period; By narrowing the focus of education to a set of measurable outputs&comma; we are effectively lobotomizing the creative potential of the next generation&period; The data suggests that while test scores in some regions rise&comma; the ability of graduates to solve complex&comma; non-linear problems is in a state of freefall&period; You must ask yourself if you want a workforce that can circle the correct option in a multiple-choice booklet or one that can navigate the ethical and technical complexities of an AI-integrated economy&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Quantified Student and the Death of Curiosity<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The shift toward exam-centricity did not happen by accident&period; It began with the well-intentioned but ultimately flawed drive for accountability&period; In the United States&comma; the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 and subsequent policies like Race to the Top cemented the idea that if you cannot measure it&comma; it does not exist&period; This philosophy assumes that education is a linear process where input A leads to test result B&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Reality contradicts this model&period; When you focus solely on exams&comma; you eliminate the white space in a child’s development where original thought occurs&period; Cognitive scientists refer to this as the Curiosity Gap&period; When a teacher tells a student that a particular topic will not be on the test&comma; the student immediately devalues that information&period; You are training children to be transactional thinkers&period; They learn to ask&comma; &&num;8220&semi;What do I need to know to pass&quest;&&num;8221&semi; instead of &&num;8220&semi;Why does this matter&quest;&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Professional observations across elite university admissions reveal a disturbing trend&period; Admissions officers now report an influx of excellent sheep&period; These are students with perfect 1600 SAT scores and 5&period;0 GPAs who lack the internal drive to pursue a project without a rubric&period; They are masters of the system but strangers to their own intellectual interests&period; You are looking at a generation that is technically proficient but intellectually stagnant&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Historical Mirage of Standardized Success<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">To understand the current crisis&comma; you must look back at the origins of standardized testing&period; The early 20th century saw the rise of the efficiency movement&comma; led by figures like Frederick Winslow Taylor&period; This movement sought to apply factory principles to every aspect of human life&period; Schools were redesigned as processing plants&period; The goal was to produce a uniform product—a worker who could follow instructions and perform repetitive tasks with minimal error&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Standardized tests were the quality control mechanism of this factory&period; They were never intended to measure creativity or critical thinking&period; They were designed to sort and rank individuals into predetermined roles&period; While the global economy moved from the assembly line to the digital cloud&comma; the testing infrastructure remained stuck in 1910&period; You are using an antique thermometer to measure the temperature of a quantum computer&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">This historical inertia is not just a curiosity&period; It is a structural barrier to progress&period; When you prioritize testing&comma; you reinforce a 19th-century view of the world where knowledge is static and authority is absolute&period; This mindset is fundamentally incompatible with a world where information doubles every few months&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Economic Implications of the Testing Trap<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The economic cost of this pedagogical narrowness is staggering&period; The World Economic Forum identifies complex problem solving&comma; critical thinking&comma; and creativity as the top three skills required for the future of work&period; Standardized exams&comma; by their very nature&comma; penalize these traits&period; They reward conformity and speed&period; They punish the student who sees a third possibility in a binary question&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Data from the PISA &lpar;Programme for International Student Assessment&rpar; rankings shows a fascinating contradiction&period; Countries like South Korea and Singapore consistently top the charts in math and science scores&period; Yet&comma; these same nations struggle with lower rates of indigenous startup creation compared to the United States or Israel&comma; where the education systems are often criticized for being messier or less disciplined&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">When you prioritize the test&comma; you prioritize the known&period; You teach students to find the right answer that already exists in a database&period; Innovation requires the opposite&period; It requires stepping into the unknown and being comfortable with failure&period; Standardized testing regimes treat failure as a catastrophe rather than a data point&period; This risk-aversion is toxic to a modern economy&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Mental Health Crisis in the Classroom<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You cannot ignore the psychological toll of this high-stakes environment&period; The pressure to perform starts earlier every year&period; In some jurisdictions&comma; four-year-olds undergo assessments to determine their placement in gifted and talented tracks&period; By the time these children reach high school&comma; their entire identity is tethered to a three-digit number or a letter grade&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">A 2023 study by the American Psychological Association found that teenagers report stress levels exceeding those of adults&period; The primary driver is academic pressure&period; When you tell a student that a single exam determines their life trajectory&comma; you trigger a physiological stress response that inhibits the prefrontal cortex&period; This is the part of the brain responsible for executive function and creative thought&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You are effectively forcing students to learn while in a state of fight or flight&period; This is not an environment conducive to deep learning&period; It is an environment built for survival&period; The result is a surge in anxiety&comma; depression&comma; and burnout before these individuals even enter the professional world&period; You are producing a workforce that is exhausted before it begins&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Erosion of Teacher Autonomy and Professional Soul<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The focus on exams has turned teachers into delivery mechanisms for pre-packaged content&period; The art of teaching is being replaced by the science of test preparation&period; Teachers are no longer encouraged to follow a student’s lead or dive deep into a complex subject&period; They must stick to the pacing guide to ensure every standard is covered before the testing window opens&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">This creates a massive talent drain&period; The most passionate educators are leaving the profession because they are no longer allowed to teach&period; They are required to proctor&period; You see this in the rising teacher shortages across the globe&period; When you reduce a professional educator to a data-entry clerk for the state&comma; you lose the human element that makes education transformative&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Teachers are forced to narrow the curriculum&period; This means subjects that are not tested—music&comma; art&comma; physical education&comma; and even social studies—are sidelined or eliminated&period; You are creating a lopsided developmental experience&period; You are training students to be calculators&comma; but you are not training them to be citizens&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Case Study&colon; The United Kingdom’s GCSE Obsession<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The UK offers a stark example of what happens when the exam factory model takes over&period; The General Certificate of Secondary Education &lpar;GCSE&rpar; governs the lives of 16-year-olds&period; Schools are ranked in league tables based on these results&period; This leads to gaming the system&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Schools often push students toward easier subjects to boost the school’s overall average&period; They focus their resources on borderline students—those who might jump from a failing grade to a passing one—while ignoring both the highest achievers and those who have no hope of passing&period; This is a cold&comma; actuarial approach to human potential&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The UK’s obsession with high-stakes testing has not led to a more skilled workforce&period; Instead&comma; it has led to a generation that is highly qualified on paper but lacks basic workplace competencies&period; Employers in the City of London frequently complain that graduates cannot write a coherent memo or collaborate in a team&comma; despite their impressive academic credentials&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Fallacy of Objective Measurement<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Proponents of standardized testing argue that it is the only objective way to measure progress&period; They claim it removes bias and provides a level playing field&period; This is a fallacy&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Testing often measures socioeconomic status more accurately than it measures intelligence&period; Students from wealthy families have access to private tutors&comma; test-prep courses&comma; and multiple attempts at the exam&period; You are not measuring learning&semi; you are measuring access to resources&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Furthermore&comma; the objectivity of a test is limited to what the test-writer deems important&period; If the test-writer values rote memorization over synthesis&comma; the test will reflect that bias&period; You are outsourcing the definition of intelligence to a small group of psychometricians at testing companies&period; This is a dangerous centralization of intellectual value&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Reimagining Assessment for a Non-Linear World<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If you accept that the current model is broken&comma; you must look at alternatives&period; Assessment should be a tool for learning&comma; not just a tool for ranking&period; This requires a shift from summative assessment &lpar;the big test at the end&rpar; to formative assessment &lpar;ongoing feedback&rpar;&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Portfolio-based assessment offers a more holistic view of a student’s capabilities&period; Imagine if&comma; instead of a three-hour exam&comma; a student had to present a year-long project that solved a real-world problem in their community&period; This requires research&comma; collaboration&comma; public speaking&comma; and resilience&period; These are the skills that actually matter in the 21st century&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Finland provides a compelling counter-narrative&period; The Finnish system has almost no standardized testing until the very end of high school&period; There are no league tables&period; Teachers are given immense autonomy&period; Despite—or perhaps because of—this lack of testing&comma; Finland consistently produces some of the most literate and numerate students in the world&period; They focus on the process of learning rather than the product of a score&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Digital Era and the Obsolescence of Rote Learning<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The rise of generative AI makes the exam-centric model not just flawed&comma; but obsolete&period; If a machine can pass the Bar exam&comma; the Medical Boards&comma; and the SAT&comma; why are we still training humans to perform these same tasks&quest;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The value of human labor is shifting&period; It is moving away from the retrieval of information and toward the discernment of information&period; You need to be able to judge the quality of an AI’s output&comma; not just produce the output yourself&period; Testing regimes that reward the regurgitation of facts are preparing students for a world that no longer exists&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must demand a curriculum that emphasizes meta-cognition—thinking about thinking&period; This involves understanding how you learn&comma; how to verify sources&comma; and how to synthesize disparate ideas&period; These skills are notoriously difficult to measure on a standardized test&period; That is exactly why they are valuable&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Global Competitiveness and the New Literacy<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The countries that will lead the next century are not those with the highest test scores&period; They are those with the most adaptable populations&period; If you continue to focus on exams&comma; you are building a rigid society&period; Rigid structures crack under pressure&period; Flexible structures bend and evolve&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The new literacy is not just reading and writing&period; It is the ability to unlearn and relearn&period; The exam-centric model assumes that learning is finished once the test is over&period; This dumping of knowledge post-exam is a well-documented phenomenon&period; Students learn for the short term&period; They do not learn for life&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You see this in the professional world where credential inflation is rampant&period; People collect degrees and certifications like trophies&comma; yet the actual quality of work often remains stagnant&period; We are confusing the map &lpar;the credential&rpar; with the territory &lpar;the skill&rpar;&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Altruism and Minimalism in the Educational Context<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">A radical rethinking of education requires a move toward minimalist principles&period; You must strip away the clutter of the testing industrial complex to find the core of the human experience&period; Education should not be about the accumulation of prestige or the hoarding of credentials&period; It should be about the cultivation of a disciplined mind and an altruistic heart&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">When you focus on exams&comma; you encourage an individualistic&comma; competitive mindset&period; Students view their peers as obstacles to their own success&period; This is a tragedy&period; We need to foster a collaborative environment where students work together to solve collective problems&period; This is the only way we will address existential threats like climate change or pandemic preparedness&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">A minimalist approach to the curriculum would emphasize depth over breadth&period; Instead of skimming the surface of twenty subjects to prepare for twenty tests&comma; students would dive deep into a few areas of profound interest&period; This develops the ability to concentrate—a skill that is rapidly disappearing in our age of digital distraction&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Role of Technology in Decentralized Learning<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Technology can be part of the solution if used correctly&period; Instead of using software to drill and kill for tests&comma; we can use it to create personalized learning paths&period; Adaptive learning platforms can provide feedback without the pressure of a final grade&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We are entering an era of decentralized education&period; The gatekeepers of knowledge are no longer just the universities and the testing boards&period; Knowledge is everywhere&period; The role of the school must change from a provider of information to a curator of experience&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">This shift will be uncomfortable&period; It requires letting go of the objective metrics that have provided a false sense of security for decades&period; But the alternative is worse&period; If you stay the course&comma; you will continue to produce generations of highly-trained individuals who are fundamentally unprepared for the challenges of their time&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Ethics of Human Capital and the Soul of the Child<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We must view students as human beings&comma; not just human capital&period; When you treat a child as a data point in a national ranking&comma; you are performing a form of ethical violence&period; You are stripping away their individuality to serve a bureaucratic end&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Education should be an exploration of the world and the self&period; It should be about finding one&&num;8217&semi;s place in the ecosystem of life&period; It should foster an appreciation for nature&comma; art&comma; and the complexity of human society&period; None of these things can be captured in a bubble sheet&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The urgency of this transition cannot be overstated&period; We are facing global challenges—climate change&comma; social inequality&comma; the ethical integration of technology—that require a level of creative thinking we are currently drumming out of our students&period; You are trading your future for the convenience of a metric&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Actionable Insights for Stakeholders<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Changing this system requires more than just rhetoric&period; It requires a fundamental shift in how you value education&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If you are a parent&comma; you must stop equating your child’s worth with their report card&period; You must advocate for more diverse learning experiences&period; Encourage hobbies and projects that have no clear grade&period; Protect your child’s curiosity at all costs&period; Teach them that a minimalist&comma; disciplined approach to life often yields more happiness than a constant chase for higher metrics&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If you are an employer&comma; you must stop using GPA or university rankings as a primary filter for hiring&period; Look for evidence of self-directed projects&comma; volunteer work&comma; or unconventional experiences&period; Ask candidates to solve a problem in real-time rather than recounting their academic honors&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">If you are a policymaker&comma; you must move away from high-stakes testing as the primary metric for school success&period; Invest in teacher training and professional development&period; Trust the professionals in the classroom to assess their students&period; Reduce the power of the testing industry and return that power to the community&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Geopolitical Stakes of Educational Reform<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The debate over testing is not just a domestic policy issue&period; It is a matter of geopolitical stability&period; In a multipolar world&comma; the nation that can harness the full creative potential of its citizens will hold the advantage&period; If you continue to churn out compliant test-takers while your rivals foster innovative thinkers&comma; you will lose your competitive edge within a single generation&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Look at the rise of the knowledge economy in emerging markets&period; These nations are not burdened by the same legacy infrastructure as the West&period; Some are leapfrogging the testing phase and moving directly into project-based&comma; technologically integrated learning models&period; This is a direct threat to the established order&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You must realize that the skills that won the 20th century—discipline&comma; uniformity&comma; and mass production—are not the skills that will win the 21st&period; The new era belongs to the agile&comma; the empathetic&comma; and the imaginative&period; Standardized testing is an anchor dragging behind a ship that needs to move at warp speed&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>Breaking the Cycle of Performative Education<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The current obsession with exams is a form of performative education&period; It looks like learning&period; It sounds like learning&period; It produces reports that say learning is happening&period; But underneath the surface&comma; the substance is missing&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">It is time to end the charade&period; You must acknowledge that the test is not the goal&period; The goal is a resilient&comma; thoughtful&comma; and capable human being&period; If the test gets in the way of that goal&comma; the test must go&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">This is not a call for the end of standards&period; It is a call for higher standards&period; A multiple-choice test is a low standard&period; It is easy to grade&comma; but it is hard to respect&period; We must demand assessments that are as complex and nuanced as the students themselves&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h3><b>The Path Forward&colon; A Call to Intellectual Arms<&sol;b><&sol;h3>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The movement away from exam-centricity is already beginning in small pockets of innovation&period; You see it in unschooling movements&comma; in progressive private schools&comma; and in forward-thinking public districts that are opting out of state tests&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">But these are exceptions&period; The exam factory remains the default&period; Changing the default requires a collective act of will&period; It requires teachers to push back&comma; parents to speak up&comma; and students to demand more than just a credential&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">You have the power to redefine what it means to be educated&period; You can choose to value the question over the answer&period; You can choose to value the journey over the destination&period; The future of our civilization depends on whether you have the courage to make that choice&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The data is clear&period; The professional observations are consistent&period; The economic signals are flashing red&period; We are over-testing our children and under-developing our people&period; The cost of inaction is a stagnant society&comma; a burned-out workforce&comma; and a lost generation of thinkers&period; You must decide if a high test score is worth the price of a human mind&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">We are standing at a precipice&period; On one side is the continued decline into a data-driven mediocrity where every human thought is pre-calculated and every child&&num;8217&semi;s potential is capped by a standard deviation&period; On the other side is a vibrant&comma; chaotic&comma; and infinitely more promising future where education serves the human spirit&period; The urgency of the moment demands that we choose the latter&period; There is no more time for incremental change&period; We need a revolution in the classroom&comma; and we need it now&period;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">REFERENCES<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Case Against Standardized Testing by Alfie Kohn<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;alfiekohn&period;org&sol;standards-testing&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Global Achievement Gap by Tony Wagner<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;tonywagner&period;com&sol;the-global-achievement-gap&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">World Economic Forum&colon; The Future of Jobs Report 2023<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;weforum&period;org&sol;reports&sol;the-future-of-jobs-report-2023&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">PISA 2022 Results&colon; Factsheets<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;oecd&period;org&sol;pisa&sol;publications&sol;pisa-2022-results&period;htm<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Excellent Sheep&colon; The Miseducation of the American Elite and the Way to a Meaningful Life by William Deresiewicz<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;billderesiewicz&period;com&sol;books&sol;excellent-sheep&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">American Psychological Association&colon; Stress in America 2023<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;apa&period;org&sol;news&sol;press&sol;releases&sol;stress&sol;2023&sol;collective-trauma-uncertainty<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Finland&&num;8217&semi;s Education System&colon; A Case Study<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;oph&period;fi&sol;en&sol;education-system<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Death of Curiosity&colon; Why We Are Testing Our Students to Death<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;theatlantic&period;com&sol;education&sol;archive&sol;2014&sol;06&sol;the-death-of-curiosity&sol;373111&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">No Child Left Behind and the Industrialization of Schools<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;edweek&period;org&sol;policy-politics&sol;no-child-left-behind-an-overview&sol;2015&sol;04<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Creative Problem Solving in the Age of AI<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;hbr&period;org&sol;2023&sol;07&sol;how-generative-ai-will-change-the-way-we-work<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Tyranny of Metrics by Jerry Z&period; Muller https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;princetonuniversitypress&period;cn&sol;books&sol;hardcover&sol;9780691174952&sol;the-tyranny-of-metrics<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Dumbing Us Down&colon; The Hidden Curriculum of Compulsory Schooling by John Taylor Gatto https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;johntaylorgatto&period;com&sol;books&sol;dumbing-us-down&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">The Smartest Kids in the World&colon; And How They Got That Way by Amanda Ripley https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;amandaripley&period;com&sol;the-smartest-kids-in-the-world<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Mindset&colon; The New Psychology of Success by Carol S&period; Dweck https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;mindsetworks&period;com&sol;science&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Education and the Significance of Life by Jiddu Krishnamurti https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;google&period;com&sol;search&quest;q&equals;https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;jkrishnamurti&period;org&sol;content&sol;education-and-significance-life<&sol;span><&sol;p>&NewLine;<h1><b>Author bio<&sol;b><&sol;h1>&NewLine;<p><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Julian is an engineering and humanities graduate&period; Passionate about frugality and minimalism&comma; he believes that the written word empowers people to tackle major challenges by facilitating systematic collaborative progress in science&comma; art&comma; and technology&period; In his free time&comma; he enjoys ornamental fish keeping&comma; reading&comma; writing&comma; sports&comma; and music&period; <&sol;span><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">Connect with him here <&sol;span><a href&equals;"https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;juliannevillecorrea&sol;"><span style&equals;"font-weight&colon; 400">https&colon;&sol;&sol;www&period;linkedin&period;com&sol;in&sol;juliannevillecorrea&sol;<&sol;span><&sol;a><&sol;p>&NewLine;

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